Moderator: Cartographers
It is meant to be a positive reference.joriki wrote:It's probably not meant that way, but the text at the lower right about the Victoria Crosses could easily be understood as a positive reference to what was essentially a colonialist crime. I'd suggest rephrasing it to avoid that impression.

I created a discussion thread on this: http://www.conquerclub.com/forum/viewto ... 7&t=154883. Perhaps you'd like to weigh in?koontz1973 wrote:It is meant to be a positive reference.joriki wrote:It's probably not meant that way, but the text at the lower right about the Victoria Crosses could easily be understood as a positive reference to what was essentially a colonialist crime. I'd suggest rephrasing it to avoid that impression.
joriki wrote:What do you think?
Uh... historically the positive representation of the swastika far outweighs the negative. The latter was just the most forcefully put upon the world most recently. I'm not arguing for or against your position (though I do personally reflect on colonialism in a negative light), but I felt compelled to point out the inaccuracy of the example used.joriki wrote: Given that noone is likely to misunderstand historical swastikas as a positive reference, that policy seems even stricter than one only against positive references.
I think that was a misunderstanding. I'm aware that the swastika symbol was used with positive meaning for a long time. What I meant was that its historical use on CC maps to indicate or decorate German troops is not going to be mistaken for a positive reference to the crimes carried out under that symbol. By contrast, the author of the text apparently intended the text to be a positive reference to the actions and the honouring of the colonial soldiers.lostatlimbo wrote:Uh... historically the positive representation of the swastika far outweighs the negative. The latter was just the most forcefully put upon the world most recently. I'm not arguing for or against your position (though I do personally reflect on colonialism in a negative light), but I felt compelled to point out the inaccuracy of the example used.joriki wrote: Given that noone is likely to misunderstand historical swastikas as a positive reference, that policy seems even stricter than one only against positive references.
That's simply wrong. I know people who care. I care. Also, I would argue (but of course opinions could differ on this) that the effects of colonialism are with us today. Read about the background of the Rwandan genocide for a particularly striking example.DiM wrote: anyway as i understand from another thread about a similar subject (which i'm too lazy to search), if the bad stuff happened a long time ago it is ok to talk about it, make maps about it, celebrate it, or whatever. if you want swastikas and nazis you can't, if you want obama and 9/11 you can't either. but if you want crusades, colonization and aztec human sacrifice then it's just fine cause it's old news and nobody cares
i didn't say it's right or wrong i just told you what the others told me.joriki wrote:That's simply wrong. I know people who care. I care. Also, I would argue (but of course opinions could differ on this) that the effects of colonialism are with us today. Read about the background of the Rwandan genocide for a particularly striking example.DiM wrote: anyway as i understand from another thread about a similar subject (which i'm too lazy to search), if the bad stuff happened a long time ago it is ok to talk about it, make maps about it, celebrate it, or whatever. if you want swastikas and nazis you can't, if you want obama and 9/11 you can't either. but if you want crusades, colonization and aztec human sacrifice then it's just fine cause it's old news and nobody cares
That thread is about quite a different issue, namely what sorts of *topics* are OK; some people are arguing that very recent events shouldn't be used. (By the way, I disagree.)DiM wrote:i didn't say it's right or wrong i just told you what the others told me.joriki wrote:That's simply wrong. I know people who care. I care. Also, I would argue (but of course opinions could differ on this) that the effects of colonialism are with us today. Read about the background of the Rwandan genocide for a particularly striking example.DiM wrote: anyway as i understand from another thread about a similar subject (which i'm too lazy to search), if the bad stuff happened a long time ago it is ok to talk about it, make maps about it, celebrate it, or whatever. if you want swastikas and nazis you can't, if you want obama and 9/11 you can't either. but if you want crusades, colonization and aztec human sacrifice then it's just fine cause it's old news and nobody cares
you can read for yourself in this topic: http://www.conquerclub.com/forum/viewto ... 22&start=0
You can look at it that way if you like; that doesn't mean "we should" look at it that way. I certainly don't.isaiah40 wrote:Okay I am going to take off my blue suede shoes here. While I can understand where you are coming from, I can also see the other side of the coin. These 11 men defended a fort against all odds and won when they should have lost. This is why they were awarded the Victoria Cross. Were the British - or for that matter any nation colonizing a foreign land - right in what they did? Maybe or maybe not. If it wasn't for Britain, France and Spain colonizing the America's, we wouldn't be here today. Like US troops in the middle east (which I don't agree with but i still support them), and one getting the medal of honor (our highest award/medal) for disobeying a direct order to save some of his men. Should that be squashed because some people disagree with it, I say no. They were awarded the medal fro bravery under fire, and I think that is how we should look at it, even if we disagree with what happened.
That's a fallacious slippery slope argument (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slippery_s ... as_fallacy). I've been playing on this site for three years now, and this is the very first time I've written something like this. The question "where will it stop" doesn't arise, because this is not "starting" something, it's a specific reaction to a map which in my view glorifies a crime. It is in no way an argument against "historical maps", of which we have a good many. I've played on many, probably more than half of all maps, and I've never seen anything on them that I would have taken as a positive judgement of any violent actions, let alone actions that nowadays would constitute serious war crimes. You're painting a thought police on the wall that doesn't exist and that noone would want to have. Please argue on the merits of this specific case and not on the basis of unrealistic hypotheticals. Your argument from general principles can't be valid, since there are obviously things that a majority here wouldn't tolerate, such as maps glorifying the Nazi crimes. That shows that a line must be drawn somewhere, even if it might not always be easy to draw around gray areas, and an argument that drawing such a line is "censorship" merely indicates that you would want the line to be drawn somewhere else.isaiah40 wrote: Now, that being said, if we go down that road, were will it stop? If we say the mapmaker can't put anything like that on any map, then what kind of maps will we have? A lot of mapmakers like to make historical maps, are we going to tell them that you can't have such and such on your map? If we do then we potentially lose a good mapmaker, which means you lose a good map to play on, which means people leave the site, so on and so on. Yes some maps should not be made, while others should.
So if you want to censor stories, quotes on maps etc, where do you want to stop? I am of the - remember I'm saying this not as a CA, but as someone who comes here to play for fun - opinion that if we start then we should go all the way, no middle ground. In this way we cover everything. At the same time, I wouldn't want lack to do that and neither would you or any other players here!
one the map wrote:January 1879, around 4000 Zulus attacked the tiny British outpost at Rorke's Drift. The 11 soldiers named were all awarded the Victoria Cross, Britain's highest military honour.
Over this we will have to disagree. I see nothing wrong with the text and considering it was a very long time ago, no one can be offended.joriki in original map thread wrote:It's probably not meant that way, but the text at the lower right about the Victoria Crosses could easily be understood as a positive reference to what was essentially a colonialist crime. I'd suggest rephrasing it to avoid that impression.
The reference to the VC is a positive reference to the bravery of the soldiers who fought that day. Nothing else. No matter what is put there, someone will make it out to be offensive.January 1879, after the slaughter of 1500 British at Isandlwana, the Zulu commander Cetshwayo decided to go against the tiny outpost of Rorke's Drift. Having no hope of being treated fairly by the savage natives, the British fought like gods, beating back attack after attack. 2 days later, hundreds of zulus lay dead or dying. The 11 named won the VC for bravery.

I assure you I know several people who would be offended. I'm one of them. Whether colonialism is a thing of the distant past or a recent crime with ongoing terrible effects is a deeply political question that should not be decided offhand in a text on a CC map.koontz1973 wrote: I see nothing wrong with the text and considering it was a very long time ago, no one can be offended.
That's a similar sort of fallacious slippery slope argument as the one by isaiah40 above. That is simply not the case. Nearly 200 maps have been made, with few if any complaints about this sort of thing. Nearly 200 stories have been told without someone "making out" something as offensive. These include two maps with a colonial theme, several maps including Nazi troops, a crusade, a drug war -- crimes left, right and centre. Somehow, it was possible to make all those maps without seriously offending anyone. Why is your map so special? And if it's true that this very special story for some reason cannot be told without offending someone, why not pick a less offensive story?koontz1973 wrote: The reference to the VC is a positive reference to the bravery of the soldiers who fought that day. Nothing else. No matter what is put there, someone will make it out to be offensive.
I thought I'd made that clear. In my view, those soldiers were criminals. One might argue that they were only following orders, but you're making a positive reference to the British Empire honouring them, and that certainly wasn't just following orders; it was honouring someone for a crime after ordering them to commit it. I can't imagine that a map would even get to the beta stage that contained a positive reference to Nazi soldiers "honourably" slaughtering Jugoslavian partisans. If you disagree, please say so. If you don't disagree, that shows that our disagreement doesn't lie in a principle of "someone will always be found to find something offensive", but in that you don't view colonial crimes as crimes, or at least not in the same sense. If so, you're obviously entitled to that personal opinion, but I find it offensive to bring that sort of opinion into a CC map. Why would people who have strong feelings about these crimes have to deal with you glorifying them just so you can tell a story the way you see it? And why should I have to be associated with a site that glorifies crimes when I'm just here to have fun? In my view this sort of divisive political opinion should be kept out of the maps on this site.koontz1973 wrote: What about it do you find offensive?
This argument would have been relevant if we were discussing whether the text is open to misunderstandings. We're past that point, because the author has clarified that it is in fact intended as a positive reference. So it's no longer about people being "confused" by the statement if they misunderstand it, but about whether the actually intended meaning is offensive.sundance123 wrote:I dont see a problem with this. If you look at the first line of the wikipedia article it says:
"The Victoria Cross (VC) is the highest military decoration awarded for valour . . . . . "
this is a fact.
Another fact is that the 11 people named in the map were awarded the VC.
I dont think anybody could be confused by the statement of two facts in the one sentence.
Could they?
I think US was born in fight against colonization empires. If Britain won that war most of US would be still colony of Britain.isaiah40 wrote:Were the British - or for that matter any nation colonizing a foreign land - right in what they did? Maybe or maybe not. If it wasn't for Britain, France and Spain colonizing the America's, we wouldn't be here today.
might be xml problem as koonitz recently changed it.it should be fixed soon if it is xml problemJinks wrote:Hey, this may have been brought up already, apologies if so.
In game Game 9854687, I beleive I have the territories to fulfill - 2 Cetshwayo Territories and Cetshwayo +2 bonus
Its not showing a bonus due in the stats or on BoB, am I missing something?
Thanks
Jinx

